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Borax has a density of about 1.71 grams/cc so we need to find out what volume of borax 30 grams is. The 30 grams divided by 1.71 g/cc equals 17.544 cc. A cc is equal to about 0.2029 teaspoons, so 17.544 cc times 0.2029 equals about 3.56 teaspoons of borax.

According to my kids' medicine dropper, there are5 grams in a teaspoon, so I would say 30 grams is equal to 2 tablespoons..
According to my kids' medicine dropper, there are5 grams in a teaspoon, so I would say 30 grams is equal to 2 tablespoons.

Well, that depends entirely upon what you are measuring. Grams is a unit of mass and a teaspoon is a unit of volume. For instance: If you fill a teaspoon with water it's weight (mass x gravity) is very small. However, if you fill that same teaspoon with lead it would be much heavier. Seeing that gra…vity doesn't change, nor does the teaspoon...the only thing that changes is the mass (number of grams). So there isn't a set number of grams per teaspoon. It depends upon what you are measuring. This applies no mater how many Grams or teaspoons you are trying to convert.. (MORE)

Well, that depends entirely upon what you are measuring. Grams is a unit of mass and a teaspoon is a unit of volume. For instance: If you fill a teaspoon with water it's weight (mass x gravity) is very small. However, if you fill that same teaspoon with lead it would be much heavier. Seeing that gra…vity doesn't change, nor does the teaspoon...the only thing that changes is the mass (number of grams). So there isn't a set number of grams per teaspoon. It depends upon what you are measuring. This applies no mater how many Grams or teaspoons you are trying to convert. . (MORE)

1 teaspoon standard measure = 5ml water = 5gm water. this will not be the same for other things (i.e. rice, sugar, flour, oil) as the weight to volume ratio is different but is a good rule-of-thumb gauge or estimate

Well, that depends entirely upon what you are measuring. Grams is a unit of mass and a teaspoon is a unit of volume. For instance: If you fill a teaspoon with water it's weight (mass x gravity) is very small. However, if you fill that same teaspoon with lead it would be much heavier. Seeing that gra…vity doesn't change, nor does the teaspoon...the only thing that changes is the mass (number of grams). So there isn't a set number of grams per teaspoon. It depends upon what you are measuring. This applies no mater how many Grams or teaspoons you are trying to convert. . (MORE)

There is no specific answer to this one because teaspoon is a measure of volume whereas gram is a measure of mass (think "weight"). So a teaspoon of Ivory Flake detergent would be very light, likely much less than a gram. On the other hand, a teaspoon of lead bird shot, say, would be many grams.… The essential difference between materials that take up a lot of space vs. a small amount of space is defined by their densities , expressed as mass/volume..
If your dry material has the same density as water, then one gram would be about one fifth of a teaspoon. (MORE)

A gram is a measure of mass and a teaspoon is a measure of volume they are not interchangable SECOND EDIT: It has often been written that sugar dissolves at 200 grams in 100 milliliters. It is also written that about one cup of sugar dissolves in one cup of water. If this was true, then 200 grams …would be equal to one cup, which is 48 teaspoons. (MORE)

Well, that depends entirely upon what you are measuring. Grams is a unit of mass and a teaspoon is a unit of volume. For instance: If you fill a teaspoon with water it's weight (mass x gravity) is very small. However, if you fill that same teaspoon with lead it would be much heavier. Seeing that gra…vity doesn't change, nor does the teaspoon...the only thing that changes is the mass (number of grams). So there isn't a set number of grams per teaspoon. It depends upon what you are measuring. This applies no mater how many Grams or teaspoons you are trying to convert. . (MORE)

Well, that depends entirely upon what you are measuring. Grams is a unit of mass and a teaspoon is a unit of volume. For instance: If you fill a teaspoon with water it's weight (mass x gravity) is very small. However, if you fill that same teaspoon with lead it would be much heavier. Seeing that gra…vity doesn't change, nor does the teaspoon...the only thing that changes is the mass (number of grams). So there isn't a set number of grams per teaspoon. It depends upon what you are measuring. This applies no mater how many Grams or teaspoons you are trying to convert. . (MORE)

Well, that depends entirely upon what you are measuring. Grams is a unit of mass and a teaspoon is a unit of volume. For instance: If you fill a teaspoon with water it's weight (mass x gravity) is very small. However, if you fill that same teaspoon with lead it would be much heavier. Seeing that gra…vity doesn't change, nor does the teaspoon...the only thing that changes is the mass (number of grams). So there isn't a set number of grams per teaspoon. It depends upon what you are measuring. This applies no mater how many Grams or teaspoons you are trying to convert.. (MORE)

8 grams is roughly 2 teaspoons of most dry substances. A gram is a unit of mass (or, somewhat incorrectly, weight) while a teaspoon is a unit of volume. Without knowing the density of the substance, the question can not be answered as stated, because mass and volume are two different things. … True, but for most cooking measurements 2 tsp is close enough. (MORE)

Depends what the substance you're measuring is; for example, 6 grams of lead will require fewer teaspoons than 6 grams of chocolate mousse will. There is no standard conversion for weight to volume measures.

There are roughly 4.67 grams per teaspoon, therefore 25 grams contains approximately 5 teaspoons. ====== Grams of what ? ! ? "Gram" is a unit of mass. "Teaspoon" is a unit of volume. How many grams you can fit into one teaspoon depends on what substance you're spooning. I can definitely … guarantee the answers for confectioner's sugar, water, and gold are wildly different. Look up "density" some time.(MORE)

Well, that depends entirely upon what you are measuring. Grams is a unit of mass and a teaspoon is a unit of volume. For instance: If you fill a teaspoon with water it's weight (mass x gravity) is very small. However, if you fill that same teaspoon with lead it would be much heavier. Seeing that gra…vity doesn't change, nor does the teaspoon...the only thing that changes is the mass (number of grams). So there isn't a set number of grams per teaspoon. It depends upon what you are measuring. This applies no mater how many Grams or teaspoons you are trying to convert. . (MORE)

Your 2.4 grams is a measure of weight and a teaspoon measures volume. But the "pat" answer for use in the kitchen is probably about 1/2 teaspoon. That'd be for something like salt. If you are using something dense, there will be less volume for that weight. And if it's something "lighter" then it wi…ll have more volume for that weight, just like you probably guessed. (MORE)

Well, that depends entirely upon what you are measuring. Grams is a unit of mass and a teaspoon is a unit of volume. For instance: If you fill a teaspoon with water it's weight (mass x gravity) is very small. However, if you fill that same teaspoon with lead it would be much heavier. Seeing that gra…vity doesn't change, nor does the teaspoon...the only thing that changes is the mass (number of grams). So there isn't a set number of grams per teaspoon. It depends upon what you are measuring. This applies no mater how many Grams or teaspoons you are trying to convert.. (MORE)

That's impossible to answer. A teaspoon is a measurement of volume. Whereas a gram is a measurement of weight. A gram of feathers might be the size of a golf ball where a gram of lead might be smaller than a pencil eraser.

Well, that depends entirely upon what you are measuring. Grams is a unit of mass and a teaspoon is a unit of volume. For instance: If you fill a teaspoon with water it's weight (mass x gravity) is very small. However, if you fill that same teaspoon with lead it would be much heavier. Seeing that gra…vity doesn't change, nor does the teaspoon...the only thing that changes is the mass (number of grams). So there isn't a set number of grams per teaspoon. It depends upon what you are measuring. This applies no mater how many Grams or teaspoons you are trying to convert. . (MORE)

Well, that depends entirely upon what you are measuring. Grams is a unit of mass and a teaspoon is a unit of volume. For instance: If you fill a teaspoon with water it's weight (mass x gravity) is very small. However, if you fill that same teaspoon with lead it would be much heavier. Seeing that gra…vity doesn't change, nor does the teaspoon...the only thing that changes is the mass (number of grams). So there isn't a set number of grams per teaspoon. It depends upon what you are measuring. This applies no mater how many Grams or teaspoons you are trying to convert. . (MORE)

It depends on what you're measuring. Grams is a unit of mass, and teaspoons are a unit of volume. You need density (m/v) in order to convert from grams to teaspoons accurately. It is roughly 9.5g if you're talking about a dry substance though.

Tricky question, as gram (SI) is a unit of weight and teaspoon (US) is a unit of volume. BUT since you said what the item was ... we CAN do this. First, we have to know the density or specific gravity of "salt." An internet search shows that to be 2.165. This is a measurement indicating the amount… of grams per mL of volume. So 1 mL of table salt weights 2.165 grams. So, how many mL in a teaspoon? There is roughly 29.57mL in 1 fluid ounce. There are 6 teaspoons in 1 fluid ounce. So ... there is about 4.93 mL per teaspoon. And if each of those 4.93 mL weighs 2.165 grams, then ... 4.93 * 2.165 approx 10.7 grams (MORE)